Showing posts with label 2000AD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2000AD. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 October 2020

Viral Comics!

It's still the time of the Covid-19 pandemic. I'm aware you, reader, probably know that but I'm saying that for the benefit of someone who might be reading this in some future time when this is all over. Assuming that happens.

One of my first thoughts after the lockdown started was of Edgar Allan Poe's short story The Masque of the Red Death. It's about a group of rich people who lock themselves up in a castle so that they can party while the peasants outside are dying of the plague.

This might remind one of certain footballers.

There's lots of comics adaptations of this story but I can recommend the one by Richard Corben from 2013 (published as The Raven and The Red Death by Dark Horse).

Anyway, like many other people, I have used some of my lock-down time to catch up on some things I've missed and revisit some old favourites.
For example, I have read The Wild Storm from 2017 by Warren Ellis and Jon Davis-Hunt and this panel struck me as sad. 
 
(And I hasten to point out this was before I knew what we now know about Ellis)

I've also been rereading Neil Gaiman's groundbreaking Sandman (1989) (on and off) and had forgotten that that starts with a worldwide "sleepy sickness" that baffles doctors (spoiler: it's a supernatural cause).
I had The Wilds by Vita Ayala and Emily Pearson (2018) recommended some time ago so I gave it a go.
Yep, it's about a worldwide disease. A bacterium that slowly turns people into plant-like organisms after becoming rage-induced "zombies".
It's good, too. We see the lives of the survivors and the specialist jobs of those with the skills to hunt for supplies. The plant-based plague makes for some very interesting visuals.
But there were plenty of things to draw parallels with our current situation. The importance of masks, for example.
All right, so we have ourselves a theme. Viral outbreaks. Let's take a look at some comics where they happen.

A virus (or a bacterium) is invisible. So how does one show it in a visual medium?

...Okay, that's one way.
The more usual way is to show it's effects on a group of people.

Or smurfs.

We have covered the history of those little blues gits before (click here for smurfin' more!) and mentioned their viral outbreak in their first solo story, Les Schtroumpfs Noirs (or in it's anglicised, pallet-swapped reprint Purple Smurfs, 1963) by Peyo there. But to reinforce for our purposes today we will notice that the virus crosses over from animal (a fly) to smurf.
We see that the virus can be passed from Smurf to Smurf by contact. Well, biting.

And it's left for Papa Smurf to develop the vaccine, administered by bellows.
I did comment on my previous post just how much this story resembles a zombie outbreak (albeit years before Night of the Living Dead) so let's briefly mention zombies.
Zombie comics have become their own mighty sub-genre, thanks largely to the all-conquering The Walking Dead by Robert Kirkman, Tony Moore and Charlie Adlard (2003-2019). 
But zombies are undoubtedly their own category, to be covered another time. 
However, my favourite mass-extinction comic story (and everyone should have at least one) is Brian K Vaughn and Pia Guerra's Y: The Last Man.
A tale of a world where every male mammal, apart from the titular Yorick and his monkey Ampersand, died instantly from an unknown disease. I won't spoil any of it here but I do recommend it.
Skipping to a different kind of comics, Daniel Clowes' David Boring (2000, originally serialised in Eightball) features a sequence where the eponymous David is led  to believe that germ warfare has struck the mainland and he's forced into quarantine in a house on an island with a group of (mainly) strangers.
It doesn't take look for paranoia and recriminations to start.
Again, I won't spoil things.

On to the world of 2000AD now and a major outbreak of the virus 2T(fru)T (ahem) has driven a sizable portion of the residents of Mega City Two mad, at the start of the epic story The Cursed Earth (1978) by Pat Mills and Brian Bolland (among others).
The scientists of Mega City One have developed a vaccine and it's up to Dredd to deliver it.
In a later story, a virus carried on the weather drives the resident of Mega City One mad with Block mania! (1982)
And, reflecting the world of 2020, this doesn't stop the citizens from taking to the beaches...
To the world of superheroes now and perhaps the best outcome for a viral outbreak: SPIDER-POWERS!
Marvel's 2011 crossover Spider-Island (various writers and artists) event saw the residents of Manhattan mysteriously developing the proportional strength and agility of a spider! Plus, y'know, sticking to walls an' that.
Fortunately New York mayor J Jonah Jameson (yes, really) was the proper authoritarian leader they needed. Immediate lockdown and forced quarantine stopped the spread any further.
Say what you like about JJ, he was a strong leader in a time of crisis.
On now to Gotham City, which in the 1996 crossover Contagion (various writers and artists) was in the grip of the Clench!
An engineered airborne virus, by people working for R'as Al Ghul, was brought into Gotham by one of the city's rich elite and spreads rapidly.
Gotham's rich elite, however, believe they are safe in their climate-controlled towers.
Yep, we're back to the Red Death.

It will be interesting to see how this world-changing event is represented in comics in the future. It's already being addressed in some quarters. 
(Six Chix, 2020)

Some newspaper comic strips (remarkably) were ahead of the curve on this. If you want to know more about how that field has adapted, you can read this article from Polygon by The Comics Curmudgeon, Josh Fuhrlinger.

On my first trip back to comic shop post-lockdown, I was surprised to find this exchange in one of the new batch of books I'd picked up from The Boys: Dear Becky by Garth Ennis and Darrick Robinson:
I imagine this was substituted in late for a different disease, but kudos to the editors for making a scene (following one set in a crowded Scottish pub) feel new.

Some people were alarmed to find there was a character from a recent Asterix story (Asterix and the Chariot Race by Jean-Yves Ferri and Didier Conrad, 2017), a champion chariot racer whose name...
Yes, the word corona-virus may have only broke through to the mainstream with Covid-19 but it was a term in use well before. And the typical Asterix punning-name convention inevitably led to this.

The story itself is a Cannonball Run-style romp with Coronavirus as the favourite (he's cheating, natch).
That's all for now. If you know of any outbreaks I've missed, feel free to let me know in the comments and maybe I'll do another.

(I've just thought of the Legacy virus from X-Men, which was more of an AIDS allegory, so don't put that)

Saturday, 31 December 2016

Annual Chrismas Round-Up 2016

Happy Life Day everyone. There was more than the usual number of Holiday-themed comics this year (or I just found more) so let's crack on!

To Beanotown! Where Christmas is threatened due to an evil plan by Walter...

 And Calamity James contracts classic comics disease spottyitis, but gets a George Bailey ending.




This is from the Beano Annual 2017, the Bash Street Teacher gets Dickensed


And from this year's Dandy Annual, Brassneck discovers he is a Transformer. Albeit a rubbish one.

And at the adult end of the humour comics, here's this year's Viz round-up

Fru T. Bunn made Christmas puddings... 

There was a delightful Broons pastiche featuring the Royal family called The Broon Windsors 


Lord Kitchener finds his pointing skills hamper his work as Santa 


And 8 Ace has a visit from a Snow-Can 
Here's the best cartoons from Private Eye







And in 2000AD:
Seasonal cheer hits Megacity One


The Ace Trucking Company takes a swipe at Amazon 
From there to that other sci-fi mainstay Doctor Who Magazine

Danger Mouse encounters this year's hottest toy: Fuzby!
Which turns out to be part of an evil plot by the Snowman (read this in the voice of Richard Ayoade for maximum effect) 
Another evil plot, this one by the Phantom Blot, is thwarted in Mickey and Donald Christmas Parade
The lead story in this anthology of European Disney comics translated to English for the first time is from Sweden's Kalle Ankas Pocket 422 and features time travelling to ruin Christmas in the 1950s to make the people of the present hate it. It's bonkers and great fun and features your actual Santa fighting robots with Huey, Louie and Dewey. 
Over in the superhero comics we got an origin for the Rebirth-era Ace the Bat-Hound!
Batman Annual was a lovely anthology that featured two riffs on the classic story The Silent Night of the Batman from 1970. The second featured Harley Quinn. And the first of many appearances of this song
Batman shuts her up quite quickly but she got to finish it over on Scooby Doo Team-Up 21
It even turned up as a ring tone for Luke Cage in Power Man and Iron Fist Annual (a story called - what else? - Sweet Christmas)
Now let's hear it sung properly....
Oh, Squid Bits.... Okay let's pay a call on The Phoenix 

But back to Scooby Doo Team-Up. Harley wants to join Mystery Inc but there investigation of the Christmassy ghost is interrupted by this guy...
Scooby Doo Team-Up delights in bringing up weird obscure bits of forgotten comics lore but I was not prepared for this:
The return of Gaggy! The Joker's original sidekick! From a 1966 Gardner Fox/Sheldon Moldoff story! 

There was possibly a record number of Santa appearances in superhero comics this year but also a surprising number of Krampus spots.

Ash is confronted in Evil Dead 2: Revenge of Krampus
Lucifer 13 has this
Technically people dressed as Krampus.

And the aforementioned Power Man and Iron Fist Annual features the returning Krampus being fought off by Daimon Hellstrom, Son of Santa Satan
All of which leads to the return of Santa himself, who has been laying low waiting for Krampus to get cocky
I sincerely hope this is the new canonical story Santa in the Marvel Universe.

Harley Quinn 10 features our anti-heroine saving Santa.... FROM HIMSELF!!

Detective Chimp is hired by.... someone to find his lost.... animal
in DC Rebirth Holiday Special 1

And in Klaus and the Witch of Winter (the first spin-off from Grant Morrison and Dan Mora's excellent Santa origin story, pulling threads from various European folk tales) we are introduced to the various avatars of Winter that make up the modern-day Santa, including St Nicholas and Father Christmas
It's The League of Extraordinary Santas!

Evil Dead 2: A Very Deadite Christmas sees Ash fighting his original nemeses in a theme park

The DC Rebirth Holiday Special (hosted by Harley Quinn - they really got their money's worth out of her this year, didn't they) was the best at showing the diverse celebrations of the season

(and the unexpected return of the Penny Plunderer!) 
John Constantine celebrates the Solstice with Wonder Woman 
New Superman taught us about Dongzhi and DC's most prominent Jewish hero, Batwoman, has a peaceful Hannukah  
And I learned of Mexican traditions for Epiphany from Green Lanterns 

I don't think anyone got left out. Did they?
Spider-man Deadpool 12 featured the return of Roman god Saturn, annoyed that his feast of Saturnalia is no longer celebrated. Well, good news. It may be forgotten on Earth....
The Simpson Annual 2017 (UK) also featured Homer doing Die Hard

The Giant Days Holiday Special 2016 gave us a glimpse into an alternate reality in a full-on What If? pastiche
Best of all this year was Gwenpool Holiday Special: Merry Mix-up wherein Gwen finds herself in a world where the Christmas traditions she knew were radically altered. Reality has changed and only she can tell!

Now Santa has been replaced by a benevolent Galactus, carols are about fish and people get gifts of hotpants every Pantsgiving.

An anthology awaits with various characters we love in this strange world. Spider-Man (Mile Morales) takes a trip to the mall, ignores Ned and Maude Flanders
before defeating a bunch of big bads with the help of a magical visit from jolly old Galactus himself 
Of course, no-one believes him.

Even The Punisher celebrates Pantsgiving 
And the Red Skull, Captain America's greatest enemy, is feeling dejected at this time of year. It's time for a festive message from a ghostly presence to lift his spirits.

And who else could that be? 
Might be the single greatest comics moment of the year.

Anyway, it turns out that Gwen finds the perpetrator of this reality shift 
It's that man again.

Also in this issue is a back-up Deadpool story set at Halloween (oh, Deadpool, you so wacky) 
I wouldn't have mentioned it if not for the child in the Eleven costume.

I'll wrap this up with one final image from the Gwenpool special, in tribute to someone we lost on Christmas Day itself. 

Happy New Year, readers!